/* 
 * tclWin32Dll.c --
 *
 *	This file contains the DLL entry point.
 *
 * Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
 * Copyright (c) 1998-2000 Scriptics Corporation.
 *
 * See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
 * of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
 *
 * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclWin32Dll.c,v 1.24.2.10 2006/10/17 04:36:45 dgp Exp $
 */

#include "tclWinInt.h"

/*
 * The following data structures are used when loading the thunking 
 * library for execing child processes under Win32s.
 */

typedef DWORD (WINAPI UT32PROC)(LPVOID lpBuff, DWORD dwUserDefined,
	LPVOID *lpTranslationList);

typedef BOOL (WINAPI UTREGISTER)(HANDLE hModule, LPCSTR SixteenBitDLL,
	LPCSTR InitName, LPCSTR ProcName, UT32PROC **ThirtyTwoBitThunk,
	FARPROC UT32Callback, LPVOID Buff);

typedef VOID (WINAPI UTUNREGISTER)(HANDLE hModule);

/* 
 * The following variables keep track of information about this DLL
 * on a per-instance basis.  Each time this DLL is loaded, it gets its own 
 * new data segment with its own copy of all static and global information.
 */

static HINSTANCE hInstance;	/* HINSTANCE of this DLL. */
static int platformId;		/* Running under NT, or 95/98? */

#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH

/*
 * Unlike Borland and Microsoft, we don't register exception handlers
 * by pushing registration records onto the runtime stack.  Instead, we
 * register them by creating an EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION within the activation
 * record.
 */

typedef struct EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION {
    struct EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION* link;
    EXCEPTION_DISPOSITION (*handler)( struct _EXCEPTION_RECORD*, void*,
				      struct _CONTEXT*, void* );
    void* ebp;
    void* esp;
    int status;
} EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION;

#endif

/*
 * VC++ 5.x has no 'cpuid' assembler instruction, so we
 * must emulate it
 */
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && ( _MSC_VER <= 1100 )
#define cpuid __asm __emit 0fh __asm __emit 0a2h
#endif

/*
 * The following function tables are used to dispatch to either the
 * wide-character or multi-byte versions of the operating system calls,
 * depending on whether the Unicode calls are available.
 */

static TclWinProcs asciiProcs = {
    0,

    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, LPDCB)) BuildCommDCBA,
    (TCHAR *(WINAPI *)(TCHAR *)) CharLowerA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, BOOL)) CopyFileA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES)) CreateDirectoryA,
    (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD, DWORD, SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES *, 
	    DWORD, DWORD, HANDLE)) CreateFileA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, TCHAR *, LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES, 
	    LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES, BOOL, DWORD, LPVOID, CONST TCHAR *, 
	    LPSTARTUPINFOA, LPPROCESS_INFORMATION)) CreateProcessA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) DeleteFileA,
    (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WIN32_FIND_DATAT *)) FindFirstFileA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, WIN32_FIND_DATAT *)) FindNextFileA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(WCHAR *, LPDWORD)) GetComputerNameA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(DWORD, WCHAR *)) GetCurrentDirectoryA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) GetFileAttributesA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD nBufferLength, WCHAR *, 
	    TCHAR **)) GetFullPathNameA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(HMODULE, WCHAR *, int)) GetModuleFileNameA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WCHAR *, DWORD)) GetShortPathNameA,
    (UINT (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, UINT uUnique, 
	    WCHAR *)) GetTempFileNameA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(DWORD, WCHAR *)) GetTempPathA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WCHAR *, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPDWORD, LPDWORD,
	    WCHAR *, DWORD)) GetVolumeInformationA,
    (HINSTANCE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) LoadLibraryA,
    (TCHAR (WINAPI *)(WCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *)) lstrcpyA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *)) MoveFileA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) RemoveDirectoryA,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, DWORD, 
	    WCHAR *, TCHAR **)) SearchPathA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) SetCurrentDirectoryA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD)) SetFileAttributesA,
    /* 
     * The three NULL function pointers will only be set when
     * Tcl_FindExecutable is called.  If you don't ever call that
     * function, the application will crash whenever WinTcl tries to call
     * functions through these null pointers.  That is not a bug in Tcl
     * -- Tcl_FindExecutable is obligatory in recent Tcl releases.
     */
    NULL,
    NULL,
    (int (__cdecl*)(CONST TCHAR *, struct _utimbuf *)) _utime,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    /* getLongPathNameProc */
    NULL,
    /* Security SDK - not available on 95,98,ME */
    NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL,
    /* ReadConsole and WriteConsole */
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, LPVOID, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPVOID)) ReadConsoleA,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, const VOID*, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPVOID)) WriteConsoleA    
};

static TclWinProcs unicodeProcs = {
    1,

    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, LPDCB)) BuildCommDCBW,
    (TCHAR *(WINAPI *)(TCHAR *)) CharLowerW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, BOOL)) CopyFileW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES)) CreateDirectoryW,
    (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD, DWORD, SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES *, 
	    DWORD, DWORD, HANDLE)) CreateFileW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, TCHAR *, LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES, 
	    LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES, BOOL, DWORD, LPVOID, CONST TCHAR *, 
	    LPSTARTUPINFOA, LPPROCESS_INFORMATION)) CreateProcessW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) DeleteFileW,
    (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WIN32_FIND_DATAT *)) FindFirstFileW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, WIN32_FIND_DATAT *)) FindNextFileW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(WCHAR *, LPDWORD)) GetComputerNameW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(DWORD, WCHAR *)) GetCurrentDirectoryW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) GetFileAttributesW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD nBufferLength, WCHAR *, 
	    TCHAR **)) GetFullPathNameW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(HMODULE, WCHAR *, int)) GetModuleFileNameW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WCHAR *, DWORD)) GetShortPathNameW,
    (UINT (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, UINT uUnique, 
	    WCHAR *)) GetTempFileNameW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(DWORD, WCHAR *)) GetTempPathW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, WCHAR *, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPDWORD, LPDWORD, 
	    WCHAR *, DWORD)) GetVolumeInformationW,
    (HINSTANCE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) LoadLibraryW,
    (TCHAR (WINAPI *)(WCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *)) lstrcpyW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *)) MoveFileW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) RemoveDirectoryW,
    (DWORD (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR *, DWORD, 
	    WCHAR *, TCHAR **)) SearchPathW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *)) SetCurrentDirectoryW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, DWORD)) SetFileAttributesW,
    /* 
     * The three NULL function pointers will only be set when
     * Tcl_FindExecutable is called.  If you don't ever call that
     * function, the application will crash whenever WinTcl tries to call
     * functions through these null pointers.  That is not a bug in Tcl
     * -- Tcl_FindExecutable is obligatory in recent Tcl releases.
     */
    NULL,
    NULL,
    (int (__cdecl*)(CONST TCHAR *, struct _utimbuf *)) _wutime,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    /* getLongPathNameProc */
    NULL,
    /* Security SDK - will be filled in on NT,XP,2000,2003 */
    NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL,
    /* ReadConsole and WriteConsole */
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, LPVOID, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPVOID)) ReadConsoleW,
    (BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, const VOID*, DWORD, LPDWORD, LPVOID)) WriteConsoleW
};

TclWinProcs *tclWinProcs;
static Tcl_Encoding tclWinTCharEncoding;


#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH

/* Need to add noinline flag to DllMain declaration so that gcc -O3
 * does not inline asm code into DllEntryPoint and cause a
 * compile time error because of redefined local labels.
 */

BOOL APIENTRY		DllMain(HINSTANCE hInst, DWORD reason, 
				LPVOID reserved)
                        __attribute__ ((noinline));

#else

/*
 * The following declaration is for the VC++ DLL entry point.
 */

BOOL APIENTRY		DllMain(HINSTANCE hInst, DWORD reason, 
				LPVOID reserved);
#endif /* HAVE_NO_SEH */


/*
 * The following structure and linked list is to allow us to map between
 * volume mount points and drive letters on the fly (no Win API exists
 * for this).
 */
typedef struct MountPointMap {
    CONST WCHAR* volumeName;       /* Native wide string volume name */
    char driveLetter;              /* Drive letter corresponding to
                                    * the volume name. */
    struct MountPointMap* nextPtr; /* Pointer to next structure in list,
                                    * or NULL */
} MountPointMap;

/* 
 * This is the head of the linked list, which is protected by the
 * mutex which follows, for thread-enabled builds.
 */
MountPointMap *driveLetterLookup = NULL;
TCL_DECLARE_MUTEX(mountPointMap)

/* We will need this below */
extern Tcl_FSDupInternalRepProc TclNativeDupInternalRep;

#ifdef __WIN32__
#ifndef STATIC_BUILD


/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * DllEntryPoint --
 *
 *	This wrapper function is used by Borland to invoke the
 *	initialization code for Tcl.  It simply calls the DllMain
 *	routine.
 *
 * Results:
 *	See DllMain.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	See DllMain.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

BOOL APIENTRY
DllEntryPoint(hInst, reason, reserved)
    HINSTANCE hInst;		/* Library instance handle. */
    DWORD reason;		/* Reason this function is being called. */
    LPVOID reserved;		/* Not used. */
{
    return DllMain(hInst, reason, reserved);
}

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * DllMain --
 *
 *	This routine is called by the VC++ C run time library init
 *	code, or the DllEntryPoint routine.  It is responsible for
 *	initializing various dynamically loaded libraries.
 *
 * Results:
 *	TRUE on sucess, FALSE on failure.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	Establishes 32-to-16 bit thunk and initializes sockets library.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
BOOL APIENTRY
DllMain(hInst, reason, reserved)
    HINSTANCE hInst;		/* Library instance handle. */
    DWORD reason;		/* Reason this function is being called. */
    LPVOID reserved;		/* Not used. */
{
#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH
    EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION registration;
#endif

    switch (reason) {
    case DLL_PROCESS_ATTACH:
	DisableThreadLibraryCalls(hInst);
	TclWinInit(hInst);
	return TRUE;

    case DLL_PROCESS_DETACH:
	/*
	 * Protect the call to Tcl_Finalize.  The OS could be unloading
	 * us from an exception handler and the state of the stack might
	 * be unstable.
	 */
#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH
        __asm__ __volatile__ (

            /*
             * Construct an EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION to protect the
             * call to Tcl_Finalize
             */
            "leal       %[registration], %%edx"         "\n\t"
            "movl       %%fs:0,         %%eax"          "\n\t"
            "movl       %%eax,          0x0(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* link */
            "leal       1f,             %%eax"          "\n\t"
            "movl       %%eax,          0x4(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* handler */
            "movl       %%ebp,          0x8(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* ebp */
            "movl       %%esp,          0xc(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* esp */
            "movl       %[error],       0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t" /* status */

            /*
             * Link the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION on the chain
             */
            "movl       %%edx,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"

            /*
             * Call Tcl_Finalize
             */
            "call       _Tcl_Finalize"                  "\n\t"

            /*
             * Come here on a normal exit. Recover the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
             * and store a TCL_OK status
             */

            "movl       %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
            "movl       %[ok],          %%eax"          "\n\t"
            "movl       %%eax,          0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t"
            "jmp        2f"                             "\n"

            /*
             * Come here on an exception. Get the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
             * that we previously put on the chain.
             */

            "1:"                                        "\t"
            "movl       %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
            "movl       0x8(%%edx),     %%edx"          "\n"


            /* 
             * Come here however we exited.  Restore context from the
             * EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION in case the stack is unbalanced.
             */

            "2:"                                        "\t"
            "movl       0xc(%%edx),     %%esp"          "\n\t"
            "movl       0x8(%%edx),     %%ebp"          "\n\t"
            "movl       0x0(%%edx),     %%eax"          "\n\t"
            "movl       %%eax,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"

            :
            /* No outputs */
            :
            [registration]      "m"     (registration),
            [ok]                "i"     (TCL_OK),
            [error]             "i"     (TCL_ERROR)
            :
            "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx", "%esi", "%edi", "memory"
            );

#else /* HAVE_NO_SEH */
	__try {
	    Tcl_Finalize();
	} __except (EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER) {
	    /* empty handler body. */
	}
#endif

	break;
    }

    return TRUE; 
}

#endif /* !STATIC_BUILD */
#endif /* __WIN32__ */

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinGetTclInstance --
 *
 *	Retrieves the global library instance handle.
 *
 * Results:
 *	Returns the global library instance handle.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

HINSTANCE
TclWinGetTclInstance()
{
    return hInstance;
}

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinInit --
 *
 *	This function initializes the internal state of the tcl library.
 *
 * Results:
 *	None.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	Initializes the tclPlatformId variable.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

void
TclWinInit(hInst)
    HINSTANCE hInst;		/* Library instance handle. */
{
    OSVERSIONINFO os;

    hInstance = hInst;
    os.dwOSVersionInfoSize = sizeof(OSVERSIONINFO);
    GetVersionEx(&os);
    platformId = os.dwPlatformId;

    /*
     * We no longer support Win32s, so just in case someone manages to
     * get a runtime there, make sure they know that.
     */

    if (platformId == VER_PLATFORM_WIN32s) {
	panic("Win32s is not a supported platform");	
    }

    tclWinProcs = &asciiProcs;
}

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinGetPlatformId --
 *
 *	Determines whether running under NT, 95, or Win32s, to allow 
 *	runtime conditional code.
 *
 * Results:
 *	The return value is one of:
 *	    VER_PLATFORM_WIN32s		Win32s on Windows 3.1. (not supported)
 *	    VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_WINDOWS	Win32 on Windows 95.
 *	    VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT	Win32 on Windows NT
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

int		
TclWinGetPlatformId()
{
    return platformId;
}

/*
 *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinNoBackslash --
 *
 *	We're always iterating through a string in Windows, changing the
 *	backslashes to slashes for use in Tcl.
 *
 * Results:
 *	All backslashes in given string are changed to slashes.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

char *
TclWinNoBackslash(
    char *path)			/* String to change. */
{
    char *p;

    for (p = path; *p != '\0'; p++) {
	if (*p == '\\') {
	    *p = '/';
	}
    }
    return path;
}

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclpCheckStackSpace --
 *
 *	Detect if we are about to blow the stack.  Called before an 
 *	evaluation can happen when nesting depth is checked.
 *
 * Results:
 *	1 if there is enough stack space to continue; 0 if not.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

int
TclpCheckStackSpace()
{

#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH
    EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION registration;
#endif
    int retval = 0;

    /*
     * We can recurse only if there is at least TCL_WIN_STACK_THRESHOLD
     * bytes of stack space left.  alloca() is cheap on windows; basically
     * it just subtracts from the stack pointer causing the OS to throw an
     * exception if the stack pointer is set below the bottom of the stack.
     */

#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH
    __asm__ __volatile__ (

        /*
         * Construct an EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION to protect the
         * call to __alloca
         */
        "leal   %[registration], %%edx"         "\n\t"
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x0(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* link */
        "leal   1f,             %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x4(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* handler */
        "movl   %%ebp,          0x8(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* ebp */
        "movl   %%esp,          0xc(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* esp */
        "movl   %[error],       0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t" /* status */
        
        /*
         * Link the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION on the chain
         */
        "movl   %%edx,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"

        /*
         * Attempt a call to __alloca, to determine whether there's
         * sufficient memory to be had.
         */

        "movl   %[size],        %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "pushl  %%eax"                          "\n\t"
        "call   __alloca"                       "\n\t"

        /*
         * Come here on a normal exit. Recover the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
         * and store a TCL_OK status
         */
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %[ok],          %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t"
        "jmp    2f"                             "\n"

        /*
         * Come here on an exception. Get the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
         * that we previously put on the chain.
         */
        "1:"                                    "\t"
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x8(%%edx),     %%edx"          "\n\t"
        
        /* 
         * Come here however we exited.  Restore context from the
         * EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION in case the stack is unbalanced.
         */
        
        "2:"                                    "\t"
        "movl   0xc(%%edx),     %%esp"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x8(%%edx),     %%ebp"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x0(%%edx),     %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"
        
        :
        /* No outputs */
        :
        [registration]  "m"     (registration),
        [ok]            "i"     (TCL_OK),
        [error]         "i"     (TCL_ERROR),
        [size]          "i"     (TCL_WIN_STACK_THRESHOLD)
        :
        "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx", "%esi", "%edi", "memory"
        );
    retval = (registration.status == TCL_OK);

#else /* !HAVE_NO_SEH */
    __try {
#ifdef HAVE_ALLOCA_GCC_INLINE
        __asm__ __volatile__ (
            "movl  %0, %%eax" "\n\t"
            "call  __alloca" "\n\t"
            :
            : "i"(TCL_WIN_STACK_THRESHOLD)
            : "%eax");
#else
        alloca(TCL_WIN_STACK_THRESHOLD);
#endif /* HAVE_ALLOCA_GCC_INLINE */
        retval = 1;
    } __except (EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER) {}
#endif /* HAVE_NO_SEH */

    return retval;
}

/*
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinGetPlatform --
 *
 *	This is a kludge that allows the test library to get access
 *	the internal tclPlatform variable.
 *
 * Results:
 *	Returns a pointer to the tclPlatform variable.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

TclPlatformType *
TclWinGetPlatform()
{
    return &tclPlatform;
}

/*
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinSetInterfaces --
 *
 *	A helper proc that allows the test library to change the
 *	tclWinProcs structure to dispatch to either the wide-character
 *	or multi-byte versions of the operating system calls, depending
 *	on whether Unicode is the system encoding.
 *	
 *	As well as this, we can also try to load in some additional
 *	procs which may/may not be present depending on the current
 *	Windows version (e.g. Win95 will not have the procs below).
 *
 * Results:
 *	None.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

void
TclWinSetInterfaces(
    int wide)			/* Non-zero to use wide interfaces, 0
				 * otherwise. */
{
    Tcl_FreeEncoding(tclWinTCharEncoding);

    if (wide) {
	tclWinProcs = &unicodeProcs;
	tclWinTCharEncoding = Tcl_GetEncoding(NULL, "unicode");
	if (tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesExProc == NULL) {
	    HINSTANCE hInstance = LoadLibraryA("kernel32");
	    if (hInstance != NULL) {
	        tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesExProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, GET_FILEEX_INFO_LEVELS, 
		  LPVOID)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, "GetFileAttributesExW");
		tclWinProcs->createHardLinkProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR*, 
		  LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "CreateHardLinkW");
	        tclWinProcs->findFirstFileExProc = 
		  (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR*, UINT,
		  LPVOID, UINT, LPVOID, DWORD)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "FindFirstFileExW");
	        tclWinProcs->getVolumeNameForVMPProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR*, TCHAR*, 
		  DWORD)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "GetVolumeNameForVolumeMountPointW");
		FreeLibrary(hInstance);
	    }
	    hInstance = LoadLibraryA("advapi32");
	    if (hInstance != NULL) {
		tclWinProcs->getFileSecurityProc = (BOOL (WINAPI *)(
			LPCTSTR lpFileName,
			SECURITY_INFORMATION RequestedInformation,
			PSECURITY_DESCRIPTOR pSecurityDescriptor,
			DWORD nLength, LPDWORD lpnLengthNeeded))
			GetProcAddress(hInstance, "GetFileSecurityW");
		tclWinProcs->impersonateSelfProc = (BOOL (WINAPI *) (
			SECURITY_IMPERSONATION_LEVEL ImpersonationLevel))
			GetProcAddress(hInstance, "ImpersonateSelf");
		tclWinProcs->openThreadTokenProc = (BOOL (WINAPI *) (
			HANDLE ThreadHandle, DWORD DesiredAccess,
			BOOL OpenAsSelf, PHANDLE TokenHandle))
			GetProcAddress(hInstance, "OpenThreadToken");
		tclWinProcs->revertToSelfProc = (BOOL (WINAPI *) (void))
			GetProcAddress(hInstance, "RevertToSelf");
		tclWinProcs->mapGenericMaskProc = (VOID (WINAPI *) (
			PDWORD AccessMask, PGENERIC_MAPPING GenericMapping))
			GetProcAddress(hInstance, "MapGenericMask");
		tclWinProcs->accessCheckProc = (BOOL (WINAPI *)(
			PSECURITY_DESCRIPTOR pSecurityDescriptor,
			HANDLE ClientToken, DWORD DesiredAccess,
			PGENERIC_MAPPING GenericMapping,
			PPRIVILEGE_SET PrivilegeSet,
			LPDWORD PrivilegeSetLength, LPDWORD GrantedAccess,
			LPBOOL AccessStatus)) GetProcAddress(hInstance,
			"AccessCheck");
		FreeLibrary(hInstance);
	    }
	}
    } else {
	tclWinProcs = &asciiProcs;
	tclWinTCharEncoding = NULL;
	if (tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesExProc == NULL) {
	    HINSTANCE hInstance = LoadLibraryA("kernel32");
	    if (hInstance != NULL) {
		tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesExProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, GET_FILEEX_INFO_LEVELS, 
		  LPVOID)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, "GetFileAttributesExA");
		tclWinProcs->createHardLinkProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR *, CONST TCHAR*, 
		  LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "CreateHardLinkA");
		tclWinProcs->findFirstFileExProc = 
		  (HANDLE (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR*, UINT,
		  LPVOID, UINT, LPVOID, DWORD)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "FindFirstFileExA");
		tclWinProcs->getLongPathNameProc = NULL;
		tclWinProcs->getVolumeNameForVMPProc = 
		  (BOOL (WINAPI *)(CONST TCHAR*, TCHAR*, 
		  DWORD)) GetProcAddress(hInstance, 
		  "GetVolumeNameForVolumeMountPointA");
		FreeLibrary(hInstance);
	    }
	}
    }
}

/*
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinResetInterfaceEncodings --
 *
 *	Called during finalization to free up any encodings we use.
 *	The tclWinProcs-> look up table is still ok to use after
 *	this call, provided no encoding conversion is required.
 *
 *      We also clean up any memory allocated in our mount point
 *      map which is used to follow certain kinds of symlinks.
 *      That code should never be used once encodings are taken
 *      down.
 *      
 * Results:
 *	None.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
void
TclWinResetInterfaceEncodings()
{
    MountPointMap *dlIter, *dlIter2;
    if (tclWinTCharEncoding != NULL) {
	Tcl_FreeEncoding(tclWinTCharEncoding);
	tclWinTCharEncoding = NULL;
    }
    /* Clean up the mount point map */
    Tcl_MutexLock(&mountPointMap);
    dlIter = driveLetterLookup; 
    while (dlIter != NULL) {
	dlIter2 = dlIter->nextPtr;
	ckfree((char*)dlIter->volumeName);
	ckfree((char*)dlIter);
	dlIter = dlIter2;
    }
    Tcl_MutexUnlock(&mountPointMap);
}

/*
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinResetInterfaces --
 *
 *	Called during finalization to reset us to a safe state for reuse.
 *	After this call, it is best not to use the tclWinProcs-> look
 *	up table since it is likely to be different to what is expected.
 *
 * Results:
 *	None.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
void
TclWinResetInterfaces()
{
    tclWinProcs = &asciiProcs;
}

/*
 *--------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinDriveLetterForVolMountPoint
 *
 * Unfortunately, Windows provides no easy way at all to get hold
 * of the drive letter for a volume mount point, but we need that
 * information to understand paths correctly.  So, we have to 
 * build an associated array to find these correctly, and allow
 * quick and easy lookup from volume mount points to drive letters.
 * 
 * We assume here that we are running on a system for which the wide
 * character interfaces are used, which is valid for Win 2000 and WinXP
 * which are the only systems on which this function will ever be called.
 * 
 * Result: the drive letter, or -1 if no drive letter corresponds to
 * the given mount point.
 * 
 *--------------------------------------------------------------------
 */
char 
TclWinDriveLetterForVolMountPoint(CONST WCHAR *mountPoint)
{
    MountPointMap *dlIter, *dlPtr2;
    WCHAR Target[55];         /* Target of mount at mount point */
    WCHAR drive[4] = { L'A', L':', L'\\', L'\0' };
    
    /* 
     * Detect the volume mounted there.  Unfortunately, there is no
     * simple way to map a unique volume name to a DOS drive letter.  
     * So, we have to build an associative array.
     */
    
    Tcl_MutexLock(&mountPointMap);
    dlIter = driveLetterLookup; 
    while (dlIter != NULL) {
	if (wcscmp(dlIter->volumeName, mountPoint) == 0) {
	    /* 
	     * We need to check whether this information is
	     * still valid, since either the user or various
	     * programs could have adjusted the mount points on
	     * the fly.
	     */
	    drive[0] = L'A' + (dlIter->driveLetter - 'A');
	    /* Try to read the volume mount point and see where it points */
	    if ((*tclWinProcs->getVolumeNameForVMPProc)((TCHAR*)drive, 
					       (TCHAR*)Target, 55) != 0) {
		if (wcscmp((WCHAR*)dlIter->volumeName, Target) == 0) {
		    /* Nothing has changed */
		    Tcl_MutexUnlock(&mountPointMap);
		    return dlIter->driveLetter;
		}
	    }
	    /* 
	     * If we reach here, unfortunately, this mount point is
	     * no longer valid at all
	     */
	    if (driveLetterLookup == dlIter) {
		dlPtr2 = dlIter;
		driveLetterLookup = dlIter->nextPtr;
	    } else {
		for (dlPtr2 = driveLetterLookup; 
		     dlPtr2 != NULL; dlPtr2 = dlPtr2->nextPtr) {
		    if (dlPtr2->nextPtr == dlIter) {
			dlPtr2->nextPtr = dlIter->nextPtr;
			dlPtr2 = dlIter;
			break;
		    }
		}
	    }
	    /* Now dlPtr2 points to the structure to free */
	    ckfree((char*)dlPtr2->volumeName);
	    ckfree((char*)dlPtr2);
	    /* 
	     * Restart the loop --- we could try to be clever
	     * and continue half way through, but the logic is a 
	     * bit messy, so it's cleanest just to restart
	     */
	    dlIter = driveLetterLookup;
	    continue;
	}
	dlIter = dlIter->nextPtr;
    }
   
    /* We couldn't find it, so we must iterate over the letters */
    
    for (drive[0] = L'A'; drive[0] <= L'Z'; drive[0]++) {
	/* Try to read the volume mount point and see where it points */
	if ((*tclWinProcs->getVolumeNameForVMPProc)((TCHAR*)drive, 
					   (TCHAR*)Target, 55) != 0) {
	    int alreadyStored = 0;
	    for (dlIter = driveLetterLookup; dlIter != NULL; 
		 dlIter = dlIter->nextPtr) {
		if (wcscmp((WCHAR*)dlIter->volumeName, Target) == 0) {
		    alreadyStored = 1;
		    break;
		}
	    }
	    if (!alreadyStored) {
		dlPtr2 = (MountPointMap*) ckalloc(sizeof(MountPointMap));
		dlPtr2->volumeName = TclNativeDupInternalRep(Target);
		dlPtr2->driveLetter = 'A' + (drive[0] - L'A');
		dlPtr2->nextPtr = driveLetterLookup;
		driveLetterLookup  = dlPtr2;
	    }
	}
    }
    /* Try again */
    for (dlIter = driveLetterLookup; dlIter != NULL; 
					dlIter = dlIter->nextPtr) {
	if (wcscmp(dlIter->volumeName, mountPoint) == 0) {
	    Tcl_MutexUnlock(&mountPointMap);
	    return dlIter->driveLetter;
	}
    }
    /* 
     * The volume doesn't appear to correspond to a drive letter -- we
     * remember that fact and store '-1' so we don't have to look it
     * up each time.
     */
    dlPtr2 = (MountPointMap*) ckalloc(sizeof(MountPointMap));
    dlPtr2->volumeName = TclNativeDupInternalRep((ClientData)mountPoint);
    dlPtr2->driveLetter = -1;
    dlPtr2->nextPtr = driveLetterLookup;
    driveLetterLookup  = dlPtr2;
    Tcl_MutexUnlock(&mountPointMap);
    return -1;
}

/*
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * Tcl_WinUtfToTChar, Tcl_WinTCharToUtf --
 *
 *	Convert between UTF-8 and Unicode when running Windows NT or 
 *	the current ANSI code page when running Windows 95.
 *
 *	On Mac, Unix, and Windows 95, all strings exchanged between Tcl
 *	and the OS are "char" oriented.  We need only one Tcl_Encoding to
 *	convert between UTF-8 and the system's native encoding.  We use
 *	NULL to represent that encoding.
 *
 *	On NT, some strings exchanged between Tcl and the OS are "char"
 *	oriented, while others are in Unicode.  We need two Tcl_Encoding
 *	APIs depending on whether we are targeting a "char" or Unicode
 *	interface.  
 *
 *	Calling Tcl_UtfToExternal() or Tcl_ExternalToUtf() with an
 *	encoding of NULL should always used to convert between UTF-8
 *	and the system's "char" oriented encoding.  The following two
 *	functions are used in Windows-specific code to convert between
 *	UTF-8 and Unicode strings (NT) or "char" strings(95).  This saves
 *	you the trouble of writing the following type of fragment over and
 *	over:
 *
 *		if (running NT) {
 *		    encoding <- Tcl_GetEncoding("unicode");
 *		    nativeBuffer <- UtfToExternal(encoding, utfBuffer);
 *		    Tcl_FreeEncoding(encoding);
 *		} else {
 *		    nativeBuffer <- UtfToExternal(NULL, utfBuffer);
 *		}
 *
 *	By convention, in Windows a TCHAR is a character in the ANSI code
 *	page on Windows 95, a Unicode character on Windows NT.  If you
 *	plan on targeting a Unicode interfaces when running on NT and a
 *	"char" oriented interface while running on 95, these functions
 *	should be used.  If you plan on targetting the same "char"
 *	oriented function on both 95 and NT, use Tcl_UtfToExternal()
 *	with an encoding of NULL.
 *
 * Results:
 *	The result is a pointer to the string in the desired target
 *	encoding.  Storage for the result string is allocated in
 *	dsPtr; the caller must call Tcl_DStringFree() when the result
 *	is no longer needed.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	None.
 *
 *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

TCHAR *
Tcl_WinUtfToTChar(string, len, dsPtr)
    CONST char *string;		/* Source string in UTF-8. */
    int len;			/* Source string length in bytes, or < 0 for
				 * strlen(). */
    Tcl_DString *dsPtr;		/* Uninitialized or free DString in which 
				 * the converted string is stored. */
{
    return (TCHAR *) Tcl_UtfToExternalDString(tclWinTCharEncoding, 
	    string, len, dsPtr);
}

char *
Tcl_WinTCharToUtf(string, len, dsPtr)
    CONST TCHAR *string;	/* Source string in Unicode when running
				 * NT, ANSI when running 95. */
    int len;			/* Source string length in bytes, or < 0 for
				 * platform-specific string length. */
    Tcl_DString *dsPtr;		/* Uninitialized or free DString in which 
				 * the converted string is stored. */
{
    return Tcl_ExternalToUtfDString(tclWinTCharEncoding, 
	    (CONST char *) string, len, dsPtr);
}

/*
 *------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *
 * TclWinCPUID --
 *
 *	Get CPU ID information on an Intel box under Windows
 *
 * Results:
 *	Returns TCL_OK if successful, TCL_ERROR if CPUID is not
 *	supported or fails.
 *
 * Side effects:
 *	If successful, stores EAX, EBX, ECX and EDX registers after 
 *      the CPUID instruction in the four integers designated by 'regsPtr'
 *
 *----------------------------------------------------------------------
 */

int
TclWinCPUID( unsigned int index, /* Which CPUID value to retrieve */
	     unsigned int * regsPtr ) /* Registers after the CPUID */
{

#ifdef HAVE_NO_SEH
    EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION registration;
#endif
    int status = TCL_ERROR;

#if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(_WIN64)

    /* 
     * Execute the CPUID instruction with the given index, and
     * store results off 'regPtr'.
     */
    
    __asm__ __volatile__ (

        /*
         * Construct an EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION to protect the
         * CPUID instruction (early 486's don't have CPUID)
         */
        "leal   %[registration], %%edx"         "\n\t"
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x0(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* link */
        "leal   1f,             %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x4(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* handler */
        "movl   %%ebp,          0x8(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* ebp */
        "movl   %%esp,          0xc(%%edx)"     "\n\t" /* esp */
        "movl   %[error],       0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t" /* status */
        
        /*
         * Link the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION on the chain
         */
        "movl   %%edx,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"

        /*
         * Do the CPUID instruction, and save the results in
         * the 'regsPtr' area
         */

        "movl   %[rptr],        %%edi"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %[index],       %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "cpuid"                                 "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x0(%%edi)"     "\n\t"
        "movl   %%ebx,          0x4(%%edi)"     "\n\t"
        "movl   %%ecx,          0x8(%%edi)"     "\n\t"
        "movl   %%edx,          0xc(%%edi)"     "\n\t"

        /*
         * Come here on a normal exit. Recover the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
         * and store a TCL_OK status
         */
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %[ok],          %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          0x10(%%edx)"    "\n\t"
        "jmp    2f"                             "\n"

        /*
         * Come here on an exception. Get the EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION
         * that we previously put on the chain.
         */
        "1:"                                    "\t"
        "movl   %%fs:0,         %%edx"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x8(%%edx),     %%edx"          "\n\t"
        
        /* 
         * Come here however we exited.  Restore context from the
         * EXCEPTION_REGISTRATION in case the stack is unbalanced.
         */
        
        "2:"                                    "\t"
        "movl   0xc(%%edx),     %%esp"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x8(%%edx),     %%ebp"          "\n\t"
        "movl   0x0(%%edx),     %%eax"          "\n\t"
        "movl   %%eax,          %%fs:0"         "\n\t"

        : 
        /* No outputs */
        : 
        [index]         "m"     (index),
        [rptr]          "m"     (regsPtr),
        [registration]  "m"     (registration),
        [ok]            "i"     (TCL_OK),
        [error]         "i"     (TCL_ERROR)
        :
        "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx", "%esi", "%edi", "memory" );
    status = registration.status;

#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(_WIN64)

    /* Define a structure in the stack frame to hold the registers */

    struct {
	DWORD dw0;
	DWORD dw1;
	DWORD dw2;
	DWORD dw3;
    } regs;
    regs.dw0 = index;
    
    /* Execute the CPUID instruction and save regs in the stack frame */

    _try {
	_asm {
	    push    ebx
	    push    ecx
	    push    edx
	    mov     eax, regs.dw0
	    cpuid
	    mov     regs.dw0, eax
	    mov     regs.dw1, ebx
	    mov     regs.dw2, ecx
	    mov     regs.dw3, edx
            pop     edx
            pop     ecx
            pop     ebx
	}
	
	/* Copy regs back out to the caller */

	regsPtr[0]=regs.dw0;
	regsPtr[1]=regs.dw1;
	regsPtr[2]=regs.dw2;
	regsPtr[3]=regs.dw3;

	status = TCL_OK;
    } __except( EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER ) {
    }

#else
				/* Don't know how to do assembly code for
				 * this compiler and/or architecture */
#endif
    return status;
}
